Where the sale of the team stands, how Jayson Tatum stacks up early in the MVP race, and other thoughts on the Celtics
Pat Greenhouse/Globe Staff
Shaking my notebook up and down and seeing what falls out as the Celtics wind down 2024 …
▪ When the Grousbeck family announced in July that it was putting the franchise up for sale, it said it intended to sell a majority stake in late 2024 or early 2025, with the balance closing in 2028. Well, it’s late 2024, and league sources said no deal is imminent.
According to a league source familiar with the sale process, that is because official bidding has yet to commence. The source said that likely bidders are still waiting for initial meetings, and that bidding will likely begin in January. The process is expected to unfold relatively quickly after that.
Lead owner Wyc Grousbeck has said that he intends to stay in control through 2028, and he reiterated that hope during the team’s White House visit last month. Celtics co-owner Steve Pagliuca and limited partner Robert Hale are the only people to publicly state interest in joining the bidding process. Hale has said he could seek to be a lead investor or ultimately join another group to remain a limited partner.
▪ ESPN on Friday released its first NBA MVP straw poll of the season. The panel of 100 media members slotted Nuggets center Nikola Jokic first, with 57 first-place votes and 827 total points, followed by Thunder guard Shai Gilgeous-Alexander (678 points), Bucks forward Giannis Antetokounmpo (643), Celtics forward Jayson Tatum (267), and Mavericks guard Luka Doncic (123). Tatum did not receive any first-place votes and placed second on three ballots.
I had Jokic first, followed by Antetokounmpo, Gilgeous-Alexander, Tatum, and Doncic. Even though the Celtics have been excellent, they have the most-talented roster in the NBA by a good margin. And unlike last season, when the Celtics finished with seven more wins than any other team, they own the third-best record in the league.
The Celtics have been 8.7 points per 100 possessions better with Tatum on the court than off, the best net rating on the team. But Tatum’s field goal, 3-point, and free throw percentages have dipped since last season. It is only December, of course.
▪ It feels as if the Celtics have had a lengthy run of games against lesser opponents. After all, three of their 27 wins have come against the four-win Wizards. Believe it or not, Boston actually has the fifth-easiest remaining schedule, with future opponents sporting a combined winning percentage of .484.
Part of this is due to being in the crummy Eastern Conference. The six easiest remaining schedules belong to teams in the East. Having said that, January is filled with spicy matchups against the Western Conference’s Lakers, Warriors, Thunder, Nuggets, Timberwolves, and Mavericks.
▪ Players on nonguaranteed contracts will have their deals fully guaranteed if they remain on rosters past Jan. 7. This does not apply to anyone on the Celtics, but it’s worth keeping an eye on that date anyway because they still have an empty roster spot and are expected to monitor the activity of teams with players on nonguaranteed deals, according to a league source.
▪ The Celtics unraveled during the fourth quarter of their loss to the Bulls on Thursday night, with Tatum, Jaylen Brown, and coach Joe Mazzulla collecting technical fouls.
Referee crew chief Tony Brothers said in a pool interview afterward that Mazzulla was whistled for being on the floor to dispute a jump-ball call, which Mazzulla corroborated. Brothers said that Brown “questioned our integrity multiple times during that same sequence.”
Brown later relayed that he told the officials that they had called the technical foul on Mazzulla “for no reason.”
“[Referee Justin Van Duyne] said, ‘If you say it to me again, I’m going to call another tech,’ ” Brown said. “And then he called a tech. Man, get out of here. You can’t threaten guys with a technical foul. That’s not part of the game, either.”
Andrew Burke-Stevenson for The Boston Globe
Brothers said that Tatum received a “respect-the-game technical for an overt action toward an official.” The Celtics trailed by 3 before that spree of technicals in the fourth quarter, and they couldn’t recover.
▪ Looking for a last-minute Christmas gift? Check out “The Boston Globe Story of the Celtics,” a collection of hundreds of essential articles from the Globe archives about the team.